ZONE Consu l t ing
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APPEAL #14-164: RESPONSE BRIEF FROM PERMIT HOLDER
FOR HEARING: December 11, 2014
SUBJECT ADDRESS: 2655 Broderick Street
PERMIT APPL. #: 2012 04 06 7781
PROJECT: Remove & Replace Planter Constructed w/o Permit
FILING DATE: December 4, 2014
Dear President Lazarus and Commissioners of the Board:
On behalf of the property owners Mark and Carrie Casey, we offer this information and
these responses to the appeal of the subject permit. Some background information on the project
and the property follows this aerial site photo:
SUBJECT PLANTER @ 2655 BRODERICK ST
2701 GREEN ST (APPELLANT’S)
2731 GREEN ST (NEUTRAL ON PROJECT)
2645 BRODERICK ST (SUPPORTS PROJECT)
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The permit now under appeal was filed by Mr. Mark Casey, the owner of the property at 2655
Broderick St. The scope of work is to remove a planter near the north property line, adjacent to a
light court cut a story below the Casey’s grade, for the Appellant’s twelve‐unit apartment
building at 2701 Green Street, and replace the planter with a new concrete structure that is to be
built with deep piers to prevent transfer of any forces on the retaining wall on the Appellant’s
property line caused by the planter, either by gravity (vertical) loading, or by wind (lateral)
loading.
The existing planter was constructed by previous owners, years before October of 2007,
when the Casey family acquired the property. It contains some tall, slender mature birch trees,
as shown in the following photograph.
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Permits are generally not required for structures built within three feet of natural grade.
Although the top of the planter is about three feet above the existing wooden deck, its height
does exceed three feet above the soil level below the deck. Also, for as long as twenty years
predating the Caseys’ purchase of the property, other structures including part of a deck above
the planter, and stairs from that deck to grade, were built under approved permits, but never
received their required final inspection, and were thus rendered illegal. Also, a roof deck,
originally proposed as part of a 1985 permit, but removed from the scope of work prior to that
permit’s issuance, was built illegally by a previous owner. The Casey family was unaware of
these issues, as there was no disclosure regarding them from real estate agents, previous owners,
or neighbors, and no record of violations prior to the purchase of the property.
Sometime in early 2008 the Appellant (Mr. Irving Zaretsky) approached the Caseys
with objections to the presence of the stair adjacent to his property, stating that City codes did
not permit that. When told that the structure was allowed by Code, the Requester said he would
have the Code changed so that it wouldn’t be allowed, and that his legal pursuits would cost
the Casey’s $75,000 or more. Because the Caseys chose to legalize a stair in a location that had
been approved by permit, but had not received its final inspection under previous ownership,
on a property they recently purchased in good faith, the Appellant began a six‐year campaign
of bureaucratic complaints, a civil suit, and a relentless broadcast of distortions, misconceptions,
and misstatements sent to the Mayor, the District Supervisor, the City Attorney, various DBI
and Planning Department directors, managers and staff, the Zoning Administrator, City
Commissioners, Mr. Zaretsky’s colleagues in The Cow Hollow Association, and others. He has
filed 12 complaints with DBI, several of them identical to each other.
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Mr. Zaretsky’s use of every means possible to impede approval of any application filed
by the Caseys, including that which would legalize the planter, has taken its toll of time, City
resources, and funding on both sides. Although this virtual war has been waged by Mr.
Zaretsky on a broad front, the focus of this current appeal is specifically on the permit issued by
DBI that would legalize a 4’ x 14’ planter, and upon completion, would clear the Notice of
Violation and Order of Abatement regarding it.
No brief was filed by the Appellant, so our response will address the Preliminary
Statement of Appeal, which comprises two points as grounds for the appeal.
In the first point, he states that the “Planter surcharges retaining wall of 2701 Green
Street.” The permit application was with the City for a year of review. Mr. Zaretsky’s cadre of
structural and geotechnical engineers reviewed every aspect of the application, and made
numerous requests for refinements and revisions. Those which DBI staff agreed were prudent
or useful were implemented in the revised application that was approved and issued by the
City. It’s hard to imagine that any planter box design has ever received such intense scrutiny by
all three parties: the applicant’s design team, the professional staff of the City, and the
Appellants consultants.
The design of the replacement planter was carefully crafted to AVOID surcharging the
retaining wall. As the attached drawings show, the planter is founded on piers which are into
sandstone bedrock, 5.5’ deeper than the face of the retaining wall. The piers are conservatively
designed, with heavy shear reinforcement at mid‐length. The planter is heavily reinforced,
concrete, with appropriate drainage and filter fabric to protect that drainage and contain tree
roots. Potential additional lateral forces from wind loading on the trees in the planter were
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considered. The design is based on an exhaustive geotechnical report, and derived from 35
pages of structural calculations. Here is a detailed narrative of the design evolution:
On March 31, 2011, Patrick Shires (of Cotton, Shires and Associates, Inc. hereafter
“CSA”) inspected the properties with Patrick Buscovich (a structural engineer retained by Mr.
Zaretsky), Mr. Zaretsky and his attorney, Robert de Vries. Shiresʹ field notes from that
inspection indicate that:
"The retaining wall is still in relatively good shape. No significant cracks in wall. Therefore no
damage so why repair? Wall is 98 years old. Batter is 3-1/4 inches to 3-1/2 inches over 4 feet
where braced by structure and 3/4 inch to 1 inch over 4 feet where not braced by structure.
Makes sense if not restrained. Garage wall battered 7/16 inch over 4 feet, but west of garage
(where no bracing) is 4-1/8 inch over 4 feet batter. Therefore no retaining wall issues have
manifested in decades of planter and trees being there; why should they suddenly impact wall
within a few years? Also, no-one knows depth of planter footing or details of battered wall
construction."
CSA conducted a geotechnical investigation of the surcharge problem and submitted a
report entitled ʺGeotechnical Investigation of Northern Side Yard Improvements, 2633 (sic)
Broderick Street, San Francisco, Californiaʺ dated February 3, 2012. In that investigation, CSA
found that there was sandstone bedrock located 1.7 feet beneath the deck staircase concrete
footing and 2.2 to 2.5 feet beneath the concrete planter box. The fill overlying the bedrock was
found through laboratory testing to have significant cohesion which is known in soil mechanics
to restrict the amount of lateral load that can be transferred to retaining walls. Soil mechanics
calculations indicated that no surcharge lateral load would be transmitted to the retaining wall
from the planter box, hence explaining the relatively good performance of and lack of distress to
the old retaining wall. Nevertheless, out of concern for future seismic performance and
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conservatism, CSA recommended underpinning the planter box a minimum 2 feet into the
underlying sandstone bedrock to assure no future lateral impact to the wall. CSA then prepared
underpinning drawings and specifications for the existing planter box dated April 2, 2012.
In December of 2012, Mr. Zaretsky dropped the civil lawsuit to pursue action through
the DBI complaint process. He retained geotechnical engineer Frank Rollo to review CSAʹs
report and recommendations. Mr. Rollo introduced concerns about tree loads and root loads on
the retaining wall including lateral loads on the wall from wind on the trees. CSA conducted
research into the impact of roots and lateral loads on walls from trees and found that there was
no technical basis for this concern in the geotechnical design and textbook literature and the
only detailed study of such a phenomenon was a study that was done in Hong Kong where
there are numerous trees growing atop and behind stone gravity retaining walls. This study
found no negative (in fact a positive) impact from trees or tree roots on these walls and no wall
failures caused by wind loading on trees. CSA prepared a technical response to the Rollo and
Cox allegations with detailed information and calculations dated March 26, 2013.
A meeting was held on July 16, 2013 at DBI with Rollo, Cox, Rodrigo Sanchez
(structural engineer), Mr. Zaretsky, three representatives from the City (Richard Tam, Rudi
Pada and Ed Sweeney) plus owner Mark Casey, Tony Sanchez‐Correia of ARS and Patrick
Shires. The City of San Francisco DBI determined that we still needed to address tree roots and
wind loading as a potential problem because the trees in San Francisco were of a different
species than the trees in Hong Kong. Mr. Rollo stated that if the planter box did not have a
bottom, simply underpinning it would not be sufficient. CSA indicated it probably did not have
a bottom as that would kill the trees. DBI’s plan checker agreed with Mr. Rollo. CSA then
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conducted a field study and determined that the planter did in fact not have a bottom.
Consequently, a decision was made by Mr. Casey to remove and replace the planter box.
CSA addressed the tree loading problem and the wind on trees loading problem in a
report dated April 7, 2014. Design drawings for a new planter box that was founded deep into
sandstone bedrock to counter possible wind loading of trees were prepared and submitted. Mr.
Rollo still had a concern that lateral loads from the deep piers would somehow impact the
retaining wall if the reinforced concrete piers were to deflect toward the wall. Consequently, the
drawings were revised and void forms were added to the retaining wall side of the piers. Mr.
Rollo and Mr. Cox still had a problem because maybe the sides of the piers would create lateral
loading on the retaining wall. Consequently, the plans were revised and void forms were added
to the sides of the piers. Mr. Cox still had a problem because maybe tree roots would escape
from the drain openings on the back of the planter box (away from the retaining wall) and
somehow make their way out and around the planter box and back toward the retaining wall
where they would somehow add lateral load to the wall. Consequently, the plans were revised
at the counter to add geotextile fabric to the drain holes to limit root escape through the drain
holes. The permit was approved by DBI, but Mr. Zaretsky appealed the permit based on a new
allegation that the original retaining wall had two feet of freeboard and that two feet of soil was
added by the prior property owner to surcharge the retaining wall. Removing two feet of soil
would create a hole behind the wall toward which surface water would flow and collect adding
a hydrostatic surcharge to the back of the wall unless it is somehow pumped out. CSA refuted
this allegation and refused to modify the drawings with this soil removal because it is not good
engineering and in fact could be considered negligent engineering.
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This issue relates to the second point raised by the Appellant in his Preliminary
Statement of Appeal. The notion of recent additional fill against placed his retaining wall has
become an idée fixe of Mr. Zaretsky. He believes that somehow, the grade of the Casey s’ rear
yard has been raised recently by two feet. In November of 2011, it was presumably Mr. Zaretsky
who filed a complaint with DBI about this very issue.
Code Enforcement Inspector Donal Duffy abated that complaint over two years ago.
The Caseys did remove some soil from their rear yard, to correct grading and drainage issues
that could cause some water flow off their property. This corrected any Code issues to the City’s
satisfaction, if not Mr. Zaretsky’s. The month after his first complaint about soil level was
cleared, he filed a second, identical complaint. This complaint was found to be without merit,
and was abated in December of 2012 with no work required on the Casey property.
Mr. Zaretsky (presumably it was he; complainant information is suppressed on‐line)
filed a third complaint about the soil level at 2655 Broderick (see Fig. 5), and his consultant Paul
Cox twisted the findings in CSA’s soils report as follows, in reference to the rear stairs in a letter
Mr. Cox wrote to Planner Mary Woods dated September 9, 2014:
“Specifically, the vertical dimension showing that the existing stair at 3-feet above the ground
level meets the 25-foot setback is incorrect in at least two ways. First, it is measured from the top
of the existing unpermitted patio tile and not the top of the soil. Second, the soil level itself is
backfill that is part of the illegal surcharge on the neighboring retaining wall that must be
significantly reduced …
“For background on the surcharge issues, I refer you to Cotton, Shires and Associates’ report
to Mr. Casey’s then attorney James Biernat, dated February 3, 2012, and to WJE’s report to Mr.
Zaretsky’s then attorney Robert Hendrickson, dated November 14, 2012. If you do not have
copies of these reports, please let me know and I will forward them to you.” [Emphasis added]
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CSA’s report stated clearly that three types of soil were found in the rear yard at 2655
Broderick: Type 1, the reuse of native soil; Type 2 fill: imported fill placed at the time of
construction of the properties about 100 years ago; and Type 3 fill, several inches of recent
accumulation from landscape activities. Mr. Cox claims that Mr. Shire’s report verifies the
absurd assertion that two feet of the Type 2 fill was added in recent times, surcharging the wall
long after its design and construction. Here is engineer Shire’s response to this distortion:
“Regarding Mr. Zaretsky’s claim that Mr. Casey's predecessor added 2 feet of soil behind the
retaining wall and his use of our report as justification for that claim:
“Nowhere in our referenced geotechnical report did we state or imply that the original backfill
of the old retaining wall was augmented within the past several decades by adding Type 2 fill. In
the early 1900’s as it is today, it was/is common practice when constructing cut/fill lots such as
those along Broderick Street to use both the native materials removed as fill as well as importing
fill from offsite. They would cut on the upslope side of the lot and fill on the downslope side of the
lot, building retaining walls at the property lines to add more level area for yards, etc. Because the
builder of Mr. Zaretsky's lot wanted a parking garage beneath the structure and because his lot
fronts on Green Street, they had to cut an additional depth to create a level lot and had to build a
higher retaining wall to support that deeper cut. It was not the practice in the early 1900s, nor is it
now, to build retaining walls at the boundaries of cut/fill lots that have 2 feet of freeboard (2 feet of
unused retaining wall sticking up in the air). The different types of fill logged in our test pits behind
the retaining wall simply represent Type 1 - the re-use of native materials, Type 2 - the import of
offsite materials for the original lot construction as described above, and Type 3, more recent infill
from detritus and landscaping activities. We are recommending that more recent Type 3 materials
be removed in the area of the new planter box, but not the Type 1 and Type 2 materials from
original construction. Those Type 1 and Type 2 materials have been behind Zaretsky's wall since
it was built and removing them would create a sinkhole to trap water behind the wall, adding
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hydrostatic pressure to it unless the water is somehow caught and pumped away. We
recommend leaving the wall backfill conditions as they were intended to be when the wall was
constructed.” [Emphasis added.]
For engineer Cox willfully to attribute to another design professional the misstatement
that off‐site fill imported to the site a century ago is recently added fill is unconscionable.
Mr. Shire’s report does make clear that a few inches of soil have accumulated since Mr.
Zaretsky’s wall was constructed – designated “Type 3” in his report. This additional soil
volume is attributable to landscaping activities – the accumulation of duff, tanbark, and the
expansion of the soil level as plants mature and root systems expand. The Caseys have agreed,
per Mr. Shire’s recommendation, to remove some of this accumulation in the vicinity of the
property line shared with 2701 Green St. It is a few inches (not two feet) in depth.
Rationality demands the answers to these questions: 1) Where is there any evidence of
the preposterous idea that the original retaining wall was constructed more than two feet higher
than the soil it was installed to retain? 2) Are there photographs, permit drawings, or other
evidence of that freeboard? 3) What was the methodology for importing several dump truck
loads of soil into the landlocked rear yard of 2655 Broderick (hundreds of wheelbarrow loads
rolled through the garage and up the stairs to the yard above, or a crane with a scoop soaring
over the roof)? And, 4) how did that allegedly raised soil level avoid burying the top of the
Casey home’s rear foundation, and the top of the retaining wall along the Casey’s rear (west)
property line, both tops of which are visible today? Were those structures also built, like Mr.
Zaretsky apparently believes his retaining wall was, two feet higher than required to retain the
soil level original to grading of the lots? DBI experts do not find this to be likely, nor do we.
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This fictional idea of a 2‐foot surcharge on the century‐old retaining wall, on which
both CSA engineer Shires and DBI Inspector Duffy saw no signs of poor performance or recent
damage, is the basis for another attempt to derail the permitting process the Caseys have
undertaken to clear the violations for structures which they did not install.
Two applications now under Planning Department review, of which Mr. Zaretsky has
requested Planning Commission Discretionary Review, deal with a rear stair to grade, and with
legalization of a roof deck. Mr. Zaretsky states that none of these three independent structures
can be considered in isolation because they all relate to the issue of this imagined surcharge on
his wall. He has failed to explain how a roof deck at the front of the property, supported on the
deep foundations of the Casey home, surcharges a retaining wall on the other side of the lot.
The soils report and engineering work of CSA also makes clear that a light‐weight wood‐frame
stair and its landing near the supported span of Mr. Zaretsky’s retaining wall do not apply any
lateral load to the wall. And finally, regarding the permit under appeal and now before the
Board, extraordinary measures have been taken to ensure that no loads from the planter or the
trees within it will affect the retaining wall.
We therefore respectfully request that the Board uphold the planter permit, and deny
the appeal.
Yours truly,
Craig Nikitas